Saturday, November 03, 2007

How To Save Your Computer From Drink Spills

Saving Your Laptop after a Spill
Adapted From: Upgrading & Fixing Laptops for Dummies:
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This article was excerpted from: Upgrading & Fixing Laptops for Dummies:
Water, coffee, and soda are among your laptop's worst enemies. Just a little bit of such a liquid on your laptop keyboard can damage or destroy your machine or cause you to lose data.

Some laptops are more vulnerable to damage from a spill on the keyboard than others, and it doesn't always have anything to do with the price tag. Some keyboards have a thin rubber membrane beneath the keys with electrical contacts molded right into little domes under each letter; that design may feel squishy and cheap to some users, but it stands up better to a splash or a flood than a more traditional design with springs and exposed contacts. How do you know which type of design you have? Take a look for yourself by prying off a keytop; if you're shopping, you may be able to get the information from the manufacturer or a dealer.
The best way to prevent damage from a mix of liquid and electronics is to keep them as far apart as possible. Keep your laptop far away from cups of coffee, glasses of water, and cans of soda.
But in the real world, stuff happens. If you have a choice of poisons, take the water spill. A hot cup of coffee, a cold glass of soda, or a glass of wine are each bad news; all of them are slightly acidic. Acidic liquids are nastier than nearly neutral water because the acid can corrode metal contacts. And both coffee and soda can become gummy and sticky as they dry.

Here's the drill for an emergency recovery from a spill:
1. If you have your machine plugged into wall current, turn off the power at the circuit breaker in your home or office.
You don't want to touch a wet wire carrying 110 volts or so.
If you're running the machine on battery power, it's still operating, and you don't see sparks, hear odd noises, or smell burnt electrical components, shut your laptop down through the normal Windows process.
If something is obviously wrong with the machine, turn it off immediately by depressing the Off switch or by removing the battery.
2. Ground yourself by touching the center screw on the faceplate of a dry electrical outlet or by touching some other metal object that reaches to ground.
3. If you haven't done so in emergency mode, remove the AC adapter and the battery, and set them aside.
4. Disconnect any external devices (such as a mouse) attached to the USB, FireWire, serial, or other ports.
5. If you find any liquid on the battery or AC adapter, wipe them carefully and set them aside.
If your spill has thoroughly soaked the AC adapter or the battery, you probably need to consider it a loss. You can get replacement AC adapters and batteries from various sources, including the original equipment manufacturer, laptop accessory companies, and the used market.
6. Remove any cards installed in the PC Card slot.
If they're wet, carefully dry them off. If any water has gotten into the narrow slot, dry out the area with a cotton swab, taking care not to leave any threads of cotton in the internal connector.
7. Wipe off any liquid on the display.
Use a clean cloth dampened with water to remove any sticky residue.
8. Remove the hard drive and the CD/DVD drives if you have them installed in plug-in bays.
Dry them off if they're wet. Set them aside.
9. Open the memory module container; remove and dry the memory modules.
Make notes on the placement of the modules. Set them aside.
10. Hand-dry the keyboard surface with a lint-free cloth.

If you spill soda or coffee, consult the instruction manual for your computer and learn how to carefully remove each of the keycaps for the affected area. If the instruction manual includes a picture of the keyboard, make sure that you can see the names of all the keys and their locations; otherwise, make a drawing of the board, paying special attention to the location of some of the specialized keys, including cursor keys, Page Up, Page Down, Scroll Lock, and the like. Or you can use a digital camera to take a picture of the keyboard.
11. Clean the exposed membrane or switch cover and the keys themselves.
Leave the keys to dry before replacing them.
12. Leaving the display open, place the computer on a sturdy surface supported by two books or small boxes.

This setup lets air circulate all around the computer. Leave the computer and all of its separate parts to air dry for at least 24 hours. Don't use a fan or (horrors) a hair dryer to attempt to fast-forward the drying process.
13. Reassemble the pieces that you removed.
Do this step a day or more after doing Step 1 through Step 12, and make sure that everything is dry and that you don't have any dried puddles of sticky acid left anywhere on the machine. Remember to ground yourself before touching any circuitry or modules, and begin the power-up process with the battery first and the AC adapter second.
If in doubt about the safety of any part, you should go ahead and replace it instead of using it. Replacing a battery, an AC adapter, or even a hard disk drive always costs a lot less than replacing a motherboard.

Thursday, January 18, 2007

IN Malaysiakini

Have a heart for the disabled, KLCC told
Andrew Ong
Jan 18, 07 11:40am Adjust font size:

Mohd Firdaus Azizan suffers from cerebral palsy. The condition prevents the 24-year-old from being able to feed, dress or clean himself.

He suffers from speech impediment and cannot use his limbs. He has limited use of his fingers, but still manages to manuever a motorised wheelchair.

Despite this, Firdaus is determined to live as independently as possible.

The youth sells souvenir items such as key-chains and postcards along the pedestrian tunnel linking the KLCC Putra LRT station and Suria KLCC shopping complex.

"I enjoy selling these things and making an honest living," said Firdaus with the help of an interpreter during a press conference in Kuala Lumpur yesterday.

But now, his livelihood is at stake because KLCC Urus Harta managing director Mustafa Awang said that 'beggars' along the tunnel portray a negative image about Malaysia.

KLCC Urus Harta took over the tunnel from Kuala Lumpur City Hall (DBKL) on Jan 1 and has given its ‘squatters’ till Jan 18 to vacate.

Failing which, Mustafa reportedly warned that enforcement officers from the DBKL and Welfare Services Department would be summoned to remove them.

'Be proud of him'

Are petty traders with physical and mental disabilities seen as ‘damaging’ to the country’s reputation?

This was the question raised at the press conference called by the newly formed Malaysians Against Discrimination of the Disabled (Madd) coalition.

“Being able to sell things gives Firdaus some purpose and joy in his life,” said the coalition’s legal adviser N Surendran (right).

While acknowledging that KLCC has full rights over the tunnel, he said the company could have handled the situation better.

“We would think that KLCC would use their discretion and allow them to continue trading, or at least propose an alternative for them to earn a living,” he added.

KLCC should help the disabled as part of their corporate social responsibility, stressed the lawyer.

Meanwhile, wheelchair-bound activist Anthony Thanasayan also expressed disappointment over the issue.

“Why should we see people like Firdaus as a shame to the country? KLCC should be proud of him,” he told the press conference.

He said inaccessibility of public transport and buildings hinder many talented disabled people from seeking meaningful employment.

Contacted today, Mustafa declined to comment on the criticisms. He referred malaysiakini to a public relations officer who could not offer immediate comments.


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Wednesday, January 10, 2007

Disabled Protest the MPS, The Star

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Nation
Thursday January 11, 2007


Group protests against treatment

By STUART MICHAEL

KUALA LUMPUR: About 50 disabled people gathered at the Selayang Municipal Council (MPS) building at Bandar Baru Selayang yesterday to submit a memorandum expressing their dissatisfaction over the manner some MPS staff were treating disabled people.

The group mostly in wheelchairs, who alleged that MPS acted unfairly against the physically-challenged community, were frustrated when they did not get a chance to hand over the memorandum personally to MPS president Zainal Abidin Azim.

“I told them to meet me in a meeting room three times but they refused,” said Zainal.

The group of disabled persons was accompanied by lawyer N. Surendran.

The memorandum cited the alleged harsh treatment faced by disabled trader Murugan Rajoo last Thursday when MPS enforcement officers seized his motorcycle when he was nabbed for selling titbits outside a school in Rawang without a trading licence.

Murugan’s motorcycle was kept at the MPS branch office in Rawang.

A few hours later, with the assistance of MPS councillor M.B. Raja, the motorcycle was returned to Murugan.

Among those who turned up at the protest was Support Group Society for the Blind of Malaysia master mariner Capt A. Karim Stuart Russell, Police Watch & Human Rights Committee (Malaysia) secretary S. Manikavasagam, Support Group Society for the Blind of Malaysia Kuala Lumpur vice-president Anthony Thanasayan, Independent Living and Training Centre president Francis Siva and former TV3 newscaster Ras Adiba Radzi.

Anthony said the disabled people merely wanted justice.

“Why can’t Zainal come down to see us? We just wanted to give him the memorandum, that’s all. It shows that the council is not sympathetic to the needs of the disabled,” said Anthony.






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